sixth sense
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adding to the traditional five senses of touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]sixth sense (plural sixth senses)
- Extrasensory perception; the ability to sense things by means other than the known bodily senses.
- Synonym: second sight
- 1914, Edgar Rice Burroughs, chapter V, in At the Earth's Core:
- Among themselves they communicate by means of what Perry says must be a sixth sense which is cognizant of a fourth dimension.
- 1919, Joseph Conrad, chapter 3, in The Arrow of Gold: A Story between Two Notes, London: T[homas] Fisher Unwin, […], →OCLC:
- Luckily, on evidence which I could never understand, Dominic detected something suspicious. Perhaps it was by virtue of some sixth sense that men born for unlawful occupations may be gifted with.
- 1934 August, Robert E. Howard, The Devil in Iron, Chapter IV, published in Weird Tales:
- What Ghaznavi had considered animal intuition or some sixth sense was merely the razor-edged faculties and savage wit of the barbarian.
Translations
[edit]extrasensory perception
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